| 1 | # Test linking directly to S-records. |
| 2 | # By Ian Lance Taylor, Cygnus Support. |
| 3 | # Copyright 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 |
| 4 | # Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| 5 | # |
| 6 | # This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| 7 | # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
| 8 | # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or |
| 9 | # (at your option) any later version. |
| 10 | # |
| 11 | # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| 12 | # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| 13 | # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
| 14 | # GNU General Public License for more details. |
| 15 | # |
| 16 | # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| 17 | # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software |
| 18 | # Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. |
| 19 | |
| 20 | # Get the offset from an S-record line to the start of the data. |
| 21 | |
| 22 | proc srec_off { l } { |
| 23 | if [string match "S1*" $l] { |
| 24 | return 8 |
| 25 | } else { if [string match "S2*" $l] { |
| 26 | return 10 |
| 27 | } else { if [string match "S3*" $l] { |
| 28 | return 12 |
| 29 | } else { |
| 30 | return -1 |
| 31 | } } } |
| 32 | } |
| 33 | |
| 34 | # See if an S-record line contains only zero data. |
| 35 | |
| 36 | proc srec_zero { l } { |
| 37 | if [string match "S\[0789\]*" $l] { |
| 38 | return 1 |
| 39 | } |
| 40 | |
| 41 | # Strip the address and checksum. |
| 42 | if [string match "S\[123\]*" $l] { |
| 43 | set l [string range $l [srec_off $l] [expr [string length $l] - 3]] |
| 44 | } else { |
| 45 | return 0 |
| 46 | } |
| 47 | |
| 48 | # The rest must be zero. |
| 49 | return [string match "" [string trim $l "0"]] |
| 50 | } |
| 51 | |
| 52 | # Get the address of an S-record line. |
| 53 | |
| 54 | proc srec_addr { l } { |
| 55 | if [string match "S\[123\]*" $l] { |
| 56 | set addr [string range $l 4 [expr [srec_off $l] - 1]] |
| 57 | } else { |
| 58 | return -1 |
| 59 | } |
| 60 | |
| 61 | return "0x$addr" |
| 62 | } |
| 63 | |
| 64 | # Get the number of data bytes in an S-record line. |
| 65 | |
| 66 | proc srec_len { l } { |
| 67 | if ![string match "S\[123\]*" $l] { |
| 68 | return 0 |
| 69 | } |
| 70 | |
| 71 | return [expr "0x[string range $l 2 3]" - ([srec_off $l] - 4) / 2 - 1] |
| 72 | } |
| 73 | |
| 74 | # Extract bytes from an S-record line. |
| 75 | |
| 76 | proc srec_extract { l start len } { |
| 77 | set off [srec_off $l] |
| 78 | set rlen [srec_len $l] |
| 79 | set stop [expr $start + $len] |
| 80 | if { $stop > $rlen } { |
| 81 | set stop [expr $rlen] |
| 82 | } |
| 83 | set start [expr $start * 2 + $off] |
| 84 | set stop [expr $stop * 2 + $off - 1] |
| 85 | return [string range $l $start $stop] |
| 86 | } |
| 87 | |
| 88 | # See if a range of bytes in an S-record line is all zeroes. |
| 89 | |
| 90 | proc srec_zero_range { l start len } { |
| 91 | return [string match "" [string trim [srec_extract $l $start $len] "0"]] |
| 92 | } |
| 93 | |
| 94 | # Trim an S-record line such that the specified number of bytes remain |
| 95 | # at the end. |
| 96 | |
| 97 | proc srec_trim { l leave } { |
| 98 | set off [srec_off $l] |
| 99 | set addr [srec_addr $l] |
| 100 | set len [srec_len $l] |
| 101 | |
| 102 | if { $leave >= $len } { |
| 103 | return $l |
| 104 | } |
| 105 | |
| 106 | set s1 [string range $l 0 1] |
| 107 | set s2 [format "%02x" [expr ($off - 4) / 2 + $leave + 1]] |
| 108 | set s3 [format "%0[expr $off - 4]x" [expr $addr + $len - $leave]] |
| 109 | set s4 [string range $l [expr [string length $l] - ($leave * 2) - 2] end] |
| 110 | set s "${s1}${s2}${s3}${s4}" |
| 111 | |
| 112 | verbose "srec_trim { '$l' $leave } returning '$s'" 2 |
| 113 | |
| 114 | return $s |
| 115 | } |
| 116 | |
| 117 | # Report failure when comparing S-record lines |
| 118 | |
| 119 | proc srec_compare_fail { which l1 l2 } { |
| 120 | send_log "comparison failure $which:\n$l1\n$l2\n" |
| 121 | verbose "comparison failure $which:\n$l1\n$l2" |
| 122 | } |
| 123 | |
| 124 | # Compare S-record files. We don't want to fuss about things like |
| 125 | # extra zeroes. Note that BFD always sorts S-records by address. |
| 126 | |
| 127 | proc srec_compare { f1 f2 } { |
| 128 | set e1 [gets $f1 l1] |
| 129 | set e2 [gets $f2 l2] |
| 130 | |
| 131 | while { $e1 != -1 } { |
| 132 | set l1 [string trimright $l1 "\r\n"] |
| 133 | set l2 [string trimright $l2 "\r\n"] |
| 134 | if { $e2 == -1 } { |
| 135 | # If l1 contains data, it must be zero. |
| 136 | if ![srec_zero $l1] { |
| 137 | send_log "data after EOF: $l1\n" |
| 138 | verbose "data after EOF: $l1" |
| 139 | return 0 |
| 140 | } |
| 141 | } else { if { [string compare $l1 $l2] == 0 } { |
| 142 | set e1 [gets $f1 l1] |
| 143 | set e2 [gets $f2 l2] |
| 144 | } else { if { [srec_zero $l1] } { |
| 145 | set e1 [gets $f1 l1] |
| 146 | } else { if { [srec_zero $l2] } { |
| 147 | set e2 [gets $f2 l2] |
| 148 | } else { |
| 149 | # The strings are not the same, and neither is all zeroes. |
| 150 | set a1 [srec_addr $l1] |
| 151 | set n1 [srec_len $l1] |
| 152 | set a2 [srec_addr $l2] |
| 153 | set n2 [srec_len $l2] |
| 154 | |
| 155 | if { $a1 < $a2 && ![srec_zero_range $l1 0 [expr $a2 - $a1]] } { |
| 156 | verbose "$a1 $a2 [srec_extract $l1 0 [expr $a2 - $a1]]" 2 |
| 157 | srec_compare_fail 1 $l1 $l2 |
| 158 | return 0 |
| 159 | } |
| 160 | if { $a2 < $a1 && ![srec_zero_range $l2 0 [expr $a1 - $a2]] } { |
| 161 | srec_compare_fail 2 $l1 $l2 |
| 162 | return 0 |
| 163 | } |
| 164 | |
| 165 | # Here we know that any initial data in both lines is |
| 166 | # zero. Now make sure that any overlapping data matches. |
| 167 | if { $a1 < $a2 } { |
| 168 | set os1 [expr $a2 - $a1] |
| 169 | set os2 0 |
| 170 | } else { |
| 171 | set os1 0 |
| 172 | set os2 [expr $a1 - $a2] |
| 173 | } |
| 174 | if { $a1 + $n1 < $a2 + $n2 } { |
| 175 | set ol [expr $n1 - $os1] |
| 176 | } else { |
| 177 | set ol [expr $n2 - $os2] |
| 178 | } |
| 179 | |
| 180 | set x1 [srec_extract $l1 $os1 $ol] |
| 181 | set x2 [srec_extract $l2 $os2 $ol] |
| 182 | if { [string compare $x1 $x2] != 0 } { |
| 183 | verbose "$os1 $ol $x1" 2 |
| 184 | verbose "$os2 $ol $x2" 2 |
| 185 | srec_compare_fail 3 $l1 $l2 |
| 186 | return 0 |
| 187 | } |
| 188 | |
| 189 | # These strings match. Trim the data from the larger |
| 190 | # string, read a new copy of the smaller string, and |
| 191 | # continue. |
| 192 | if { $a1 + $n1 < $a2 + $n2 } { |
| 193 | set l2 [srec_trim $l2 [expr ($a2 + $n2) - ($a1 + $n1)]] |
| 194 | set e1 [gets $f1 l1] |
| 195 | } else { if { $a1 + $n1 > $a2 + $n2 } { |
| 196 | set l1 [srec_trim $l1 [expr ($a1 + $n1) - ($a2 + $n2)]] |
| 197 | set e2 [gets $f2 l2] |
| 198 | } else { |
| 199 | set e1 [gets $f1 l1] |
| 200 | set e2 [gets $f2 l2] |
| 201 | } } |
| 202 | } } } } |
| 203 | } |
| 204 | |
| 205 | # We've reached the end of the first file. The remainder of the |
| 206 | # second file must contain only zeroes. |
| 207 | while { $e2 != -1 } { |
| 208 | set l2 [string trimright $l2 "\r\n"] |
| 209 | if ![srec_zero $l2] { |
| 210 | send_log "data after EOF: $l2\n" |
| 211 | verbose "data after EOF: $l2" |
| 212 | return 0 |
| 213 | } |
| 214 | set e2 [gets $f2 l2] |
| 215 | } |
| 216 | |
| 217 | return 1 |
| 218 | } |
| 219 | |
| 220 | # Link twice, objcopy, and compare |
| 221 | |
| 222 | proc run_srec_test { test objs } { |
| 223 | global ld |
| 224 | global objcopy |
| 225 | global sizeof_headers |
| 226 | global host_triplet |
| 227 | |
| 228 | # Tell the ELF linker to not do anything clever with .eh_frame. |
| 229 | set flags "--traditional-format" |
| 230 | |
| 231 | # If the linker script uses SIZEOF_HEADERS, use a -Ttext argument |
| 232 | # to force both the normal link and the S-record link to be put in |
| 233 | # the same place. We don't always use -Ttext because it interacts |
| 234 | # poorly with a.out. |
| 235 | |
| 236 | if { $sizeof_headers } { |
| 237 | set flags "$flags -Ttext 0x1000" |
| 238 | } |
| 239 | |
| 240 | if [istarget sh64*-*-elf] { |
| 241 | # This is what gcc passes to ld by default. |
| 242 | set flags "-mshelf32" |
| 243 | # SH64 targets cannot convert format in the linker |
| 244 | # using the -oformat command line switch. |
| 245 | setup_xfail "sh64*-*-*" |
| 246 | } |
| 247 | |
| 248 | if {[istarget arm*-*-*] || \ |
| 249 | [istarget strongarm*-*-*] || \ |
| 250 | [istarget xscale*-*-*] || \ |
| 251 | [istarget thumb-*-*] } { |
| 252 | |
| 253 | # ARM targets call __gccmain |
| 254 | set flags "$flags --defsym __gccmain=0" |
| 255 | |
| 256 | # ARM targets cannot convert format in the linker |
| 257 | # using the --oformat command line switch |
| 258 | setup_xfail "*arm*-*-*" |
| 259 | setup_xfail "xscale-*-*" |
| 260 | setup_xfail "thumb-*-*" |
| 261 | } |
| 262 | |
| 263 | # PowerPC EABI code calls __eabi. |
| 264 | if [istarget powerpc*-*-eabi*] { |
| 265 | set flags "$flags --defsym __eabi=0" |
| 266 | } |
| 267 | |
| 268 | # mn10200 code calls __truncsipsi2_d0_d2. |
| 269 | if {[istarget mn10200*-*-*]} then { |
| 270 | set flags "$flags --defsym __truncsipsi2_d0_d2=0" |
| 271 | } |
| 272 | |
| 273 | # m6811/m6812 code has references to soft registers. |
| 274 | if {[istarget m6811-*-*] || [istarget m6812-*-*]} { |
| 275 | set flags "$flags --defsym _.frame=0 --defsym _.d1=0 --defsym _.d2=0" |
| 276 | set flags "$flags --defsym _.d3=0 --defsym _.d4=0" |
| 277 | set flags "$flags --defsym _.tmp=0 --defsym _.xy=0 --defsym _.z=0" |
| 278 | } |
| 279 | |
| 280 | # V850 targets need libgcc.a |
| 281 | if [istarget v850*-*-elf] { |
| 282 | set objs "$objs -L ../gcc -lgcc" |
| 283 | } |
| 284 | |
| 285 | # Xtensa ELF targets relax by default; S-Record linker does not |
| 286 | if [istarget xtensa*-*-*] { |
| 287 | set flags "$flags -no-relax" |
| 288 | } |
| 289 | |
| 290 | # Some OpenBSD targets have ProPolice and reference __guard and |
| 291 | # __stack_smash_handler. |
| 292 | if [istarget *-*-openbsd*] { |
| 293 | set flags "$flags --defsym __guard=0" |
| 294 | set flags "$flags --defsym __stack_smash_handler=0" |
| 295 | } |
| 296 | |
| 297 | if { ![ld_simple_link $ld tmpdir/sr1 "$flags $objs"] \ |
| 298 | || ![ld_simple_link $ld tmpdir/sr2.sr "$flags --oformat srec $objs"] } { |
| 299 | fail $test |
| 300 | return |
| 301 | } |
| 302 | |
| 303 | send_log "$objcopy -O srec tmpdir/sr1 tmpdir/sr1.sr\n" |
| 304 | verbose "$objcopy -O srec tmpdir/sr1 tmpdir/sr1.sr" |
| 305 | catch "exec $objcopy -O srec tmpdir/sr1 tmpdir/sr1.sr" exec_output |
| 306 | set exec_output [prune_warnings $exec_output] |
| 307 | if ![string match "" $exec_output] { |
| 308 | send_log "$exec_output\n" |
| 309 | verbose "$exec_output" |
| 310 | unresolved $test |
| 311 | return |
| 312 | } |
| 313 | |
| 314 | set f1 [open tmpdir/sr1.sr r] |
| 315 | set f2 [open tmpdir/sr2.sr r] |
| 316 | if [srec_compare $f1 $f2] { |
| 317 | pass $test |
| 318 | } else { |
| 319 | fail $test |
| 320 | } |
| 321 | close $f1 |
| 322 | close $f2 |
| 323 | } |
| 324 | |
| 325 | set test1 "S-records" |
| 326 | set test2 "S-records with constructors" |
| 327 | |
| 328 | # See whether the default linker script uses SIZEOF_HEADERS. |
| 329 | catch "exec $ld --verbose" exec_output |
| 330 | set sizeof_headers [string match "*SIZEOF_HEADERS*" $exec_output] |
| 331 | |
| 332 | # First test linking a C program. We don't require any libraries. We |
| 333 | # link it normally, and objcopy to the S-record format, and then link |
| 334 | # directly to the S-record format, and require that the two files |
| 335 | # contain the same data. |
| 336 | |
| 337 | if { [which $CC] == 0 } { |
| 338 | untested $test1 |
| 339 | untested $test2 |
| 340 | return |
| 341 | } |
| 342 | |
| 343 | if { ![ld_compile $CC $srcdir/$subdir/sr1.c tmpdir/sr1.o] \ |
| 344 | || ![ld_compile $CC $srcdir/$subdir/sr2.c tmpdir/sr2.o] } { |
| 345 | unresolved $test1 |
| 346 | unresolved $test2 |
| 347 | return |
| 348 | } |
| 349 | |
| 350 | # The i386-aout target is confused: the linker does not put the |
| 351 | # sections where objdump finds them. I don't know which is wrong. |
| 352 | setup_xfail "i*86-*-aout*" |
| 353 | |
| 354 | # These tests fail on the native MIPS ELF targets because the GP value |
| 355 | # in the .reginfo section is not updated when the S-record version is |
| 356 | # written out. The mips-elf target itself does not use a .reginfo section. |
| 357 | setup_xfail "mips*-*-irix5*" "mips*-*-irix6*" "mips*-*-linux*" |
| 358 | |
| 359 | # The S-record linker doesn't do the magic TOC handling that XCOFF |
| 360 | # linkers do. |
| 361 | setup_xfail "*-*-aix*" "*-*-xcoff*" |
| 362 | |
| 363 | # The S-record linker doesn't build ARM/Thumb stubs. |
| 364 | setup_xfail "arm-*-coff" |
| 365 | setup_xfail "strongarm*-*-coff" |
| 366 | setup_xfail "xscale*-*-coff" |
| 367 | setup_xfail "arm-*-pe*" |
| 368 | # setup_xfail "arm-*elf*" |
| 369 | setup_xfail "thumb-*-coff*" |
| 370 | setup_xfail "thumb-*-pe*" |
| 371 | setup_xfail "thumb-*-elf*" |
| 372 | setup_xfail "arm*-*-linux*" |
| 373 | |
| 374 | # The S-record linker doesn't build special EABI sections. |
| 375 | # setup_xfail "powerpc*-*-eabi*" |
| 376 | |
| 377 | # The S-record linker doesn't include the .{zda} sections. |
| 378 | setup_xfail "v850*-*-elf" |
| 379 | |
| 380 | # The S-record linker doesn't handle Alpha Elf relaxation. |
| 381 | setup_xfail "alpha*-*-elf*" "alpha*-*-linux-*" "alpha*-*-gnu*" |
| 382 | setup_xfail "alpha*-*-netbsd*" |
| 383 | |
| 384 | # The S-record linker hasn't any hope of coping with HPPA relocs. |
| 385 | setup_xfail "hppa*-*-*" |
| 386 | |
| 387 | # The S-record linker doesn't handle IA64 Elf relaxation. |
| 388 | setup_xfail "ia64-*-*" |
| 389 | |
| 390 | # The S-record linker doesn't support the special PE headers - the PE |
| 391 | # emulation tries to write pe-specific information to the PE headers |
| 392 | # in the output bfd, but it's not a PE bfd (it's an srec bfd) |
| 393 | setup_xfail "*-*-cygwin*" "*-*-mingw*" "*-*-pe*" "*-*-winnt*" |
| 394 | |
| 395 | run_srec_test $test1 "tmpdir/sr1.o tmpdir/sr2.o" |
| 396 | |
| 397 | # Now try linking a C++ program with global constructors and |
| 398 | # destructors. Note that since we are not linking against any |
| 399 | # libraries, this program won't actually work or anything. |
| 400 | |
| 401 | if { [which $CXX] == 0 } { |
| 402 | untested $test2 |
| 403 | return |
| 404 | } |
| 405 | |
| 406 | if ![ld_compile "$CXX $CXXFLAGS -fno-exceptions" $srcdir/$subdir/sr3.cc tmpdir/sr3.o] { |
| 407 | unresolved $test2 |
| 408 | return |
| 409 | } |
| 410 | |
| 411 | # See above. |
| 412 | setup_xfail "i*86-*-aout*" |
| 413 | setup_xfail "mips*-*-irix5*" "mips*-*-irix6*" "mips*-*-linux*" |
| 414 | setup_xfail "*-*-aix*" "*-*-xcoff*" |
| 415 | setup_xfail "arm*-*-*" |
| 416 | setup_xfail "strongarm*-*-*" |
| 417 | setup_xfail "thumb-*-*" |
| 418 | setup_xfail "powerpc*-*-eabi*" |
| 419 | setup_xfail "v850*-*-elf" |
| 420 | setup_xfail "alpha*-*-elf*" "alpha*-*-linux-*" "alpha*-*-gnu*" |
| 421 | setup_xfail "alpha*-*-netbsd*" |
| 422 | setup_xfail "hppa*-*-*" |
| 423 | setup_xfail "ia64-*-*" |
| 424 | setup_xfail "*-*-cygwin*" "*-*-mingw*" "*-*-pe*" "*-*-winnt*" |
| 425 | |
| 426 | run_srec_test $test2 "tmpdir/sr3.o" |